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Blinken says US not seeking Russian regime change

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Blinken says US not seeking Russian regime change

The US isn’t looking for regime change in Russia, secretary of state Antony Blinken mentioned on Sunday, a day after president Joe Biden apparently referred to as for his Russian counterpart’s ouster.

Biden on Saturday condemned Russian president Vladimir Putin, demanding: “For God’s sake, this man can not stay in energy” in remarks that drew condemnation from Moscow.

Talking in Jerusalem on Sunday, Blinken advised reporters that “the president, the White Home, made the purpose final night time that, fairly merely, President Putin can’t be empowered to wage struggle or have interaction in aggression in opposition to Ukraine or anybody else.”

Biden’s speech got here after three days of intense diplomacy in Europe looking for to stiffen western unity in opposition to Putin’s greater than month-long invasion of Ukraine, which has triggered unprecedented monetary sanctions in opposition to Moscow.

On Sunday, Russia’s army vowed to proceed its invasion, showing to be pursuing its menace to encircle Ukrainian forces within the nation’s east whereas stepping up assaults on gasoline and meals depots throughout the nation in response to western army assessments.

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Blinken’s feedback have been the second US try and stroll again what gave the impression to be a name to oust Putin from energy throughout a speech in Poland wherein Biden warned transatlantic democracies to metal themselves for a “lengthy combat forward” to guard freedom in Europe.

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The White Home later mentioned “the president’s level was that Putin can’t be allowed to train energy over his neighbours or the area”, fairly than a plan for regime change.

However the comment threatened to additional inflame already febrile tensions with Moscow, the place Putin has justified his invasion by claiming the US was utilizing Ukraine as a platform to destroy Russia’s statehood.

Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s spokesman, advised the state-run Tass company that “these private insults slender the window of alternative for our bilateral relations [to improve] beneath the present [US] administration”.

Blinken mentioned: “As you recognize, and as you’ve gotten heard us say repeatedly, we wouldn’t have a technique of regime change in Russia — or anyplace else, for that matter.”

EU officers have beforehand denied that unseating Putin is their goal, stating that sanctions are usually not geared toward upsetting regime change. A European Fee spokesperson on Sunday declined to touch upon Biden’s comment.

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After its preliminary plan for a blitzkrieg invasion foundered on fierce Ukrainian resistance, Russia seems to have dropped its effort to depose Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky in favour of a struggle of attrition, in response to western officers.

Russia mentioned on Friday that it was shifting its focus to the jap Donbas area after claiming to have accomplished “the primary part” of its invasion. Annexing Donbas, the place Moscow began a low-burning separatist battle after it seized the Crimean peninsula in 2014, would enable Russia to consolidate territorial features.

“Russian forces look like concentrating their effort to try the encirclement of Ukrainian forces instantly dealing with the separatist areas within the east of the nation, advancing from the course of Kharkiv within the north and Mariupol within the south,” the UK ministry of defence mentioned on Sunday.

It mentioned combating in northern Ukraine “stays largely static with native Ukrainian counter-attacks hampering Russian makes an attempt to reorganise their forces”.

The governor of Sumy, a area on the northern border with Russia, mentioned Ukraine’s forces had retaken two cities on the availability path to the regional capital.

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As Biden was talking on Saturday Russia carried out long-range missile strikes on a gasoline depot and restore plant in Lviv, 70km from Ukraine’s western border with Poland, in addition to a depot with air defence missiles in Kyiv.

“With these blows, the aggressor was sending greetings to President Biden,” mentioned Lviv’s mayor Andriy Sadoviy. “The entire world wants to grasp that the menace is extraordinarily critical and nobody is aware of [Russia’s] subsequent plans.”

Vadym Denysenko, an adviser to Ukraine’s inside ministry, mentioned that Russia had begun focusing on meals and gasoline storage services.

Denysenko mentioned Russia had began to construct up new teams of forces close to the border, suggesting it was planning new assaults on Ukraine, in response to Reuters.

Additionally on Sunday, the chief of the Luhansk Folks’s Republic, certainly one of two Moscow-backed separatist teams in Donbas, mentioned the group may quickly maintain a referendum on becoming a member of Russia — a doable precursor to the formal annexation of extra Ukrainian territory by Moscow.

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Further reporting by Andres Schipani in Lviv

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Stick-Wielding Man Kills 2 Homeless People in Miami and Injures 2 Others

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Stick-Wielding Man Kills 2 Homeless People in Miami and Injures 2 Others

A man with a stick attacked four homeless people in downtown Miami early Thursday morning, killing two and injuring two others in what the police called a horrible “display of unprovoked violence.”

The man was seen attacking the people with a stick at 6 a.m., the Miami Police Department said in a statement. The police responded soon after calls came in and saw a man who matched the description that had been given. He ran off but was arrested after a brief foot chase, the police said.

Two of the homeless people died at the scene of the attack. The two people who were injured were taken to a nearby trauma center for treatment, the police said. Their conditions were not available.

The authorities did not immediately release the name of the man who was arrested, who is in his 30s. They said that they would disclose his identity and the charges he faces once the charges had been confirmed. The motive for the attack was not immediately clear, the police said.

The suspect does not have an arrest history in Miami, but he has had “minor criminal run-ins with the police” in New York, Manuel A. Morales, the chief of police for the Miami Police Department, said at a news conference on Thursday. The man’s place of residence was not immediately clear.

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“This is a horrible incident,” Chief Morales said.

The Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust, the county’s leading homeless outreach group, said in a statement that it was grieving the “senseless loss of these lives.” and thanked the police for their swift response.

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Rio Tinto and Glencore held talks about combining their businesses

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Rio Tinto and Glencore held talks about combining their businesses

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Rio Tinto and Glencore held talks last year about combining part or all of their businesses, in an indication of how the push by mining companies to secure metals needed for the energy transition has focused executives on large-scale deals.

The London-listed companies engaged in early-stage talks as recently as October, according to people familiar with the matter, but the discussions did not progress to a deal.

A full-blown merger between Rio and Glencore — which have market capitalisations of $103bn and $55bn, respectively — would rank among the largest-ever transactions in the mining industry.

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The talks between the two companies followed BHP’s failed £39bn bid for Anglo American last year, which prompted rivals to review strategic options.

BHP was interested in Anglo’s copper mines, among other assets, because the metal is used in renewable energy projects and electric vehicles.

Glencore and Rio declined to comment. Bloomberg first reported the companies had discussed combining their businesses.

Rio has been looking to boost its exposure to commodities including lithium and copper to offset weakness in the iron ore market as demand from China slows.

Glencore owns stakes in two significant copper mines — Collahuasi in Chile and Antamina in Peru — that would boost its production of the metal by almost 1mn tonnes a year and offer substantial expansion capacity, according to analysts.

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A potential deal with Glencore would be complicated by the Swiss-based company’s heavy exposure to thermal coal, a commodity Rio has abandoned in recent years.

Matthew Haupt, a portfolio manager at Wilson Asset Management, which owns shares in Rio, said the deal “didn’t make a lot of sense” given Rio’s efforts to get out of coal and invest in renewable energy to power its operations.

Glencore, which has a large commodity trading business and mining operations, has been debating the future of its coal business.

The company said in 2023 it would spin out its coal mines into a separate listed business but changed its mind last year and decided to retain them. 

Glyn Lawcock, an analyst with investment bank Barrenjoey, said coal assets could be spun out as a separate company as part of any agreement. He added there was little overlap between the two companies, meaning there were few synergy benefits from a merger and a deal would need to be justified by asset diversification and creating more scale.

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Ray David, a portfolio manager at Blackwattle Investment Partners, which owns Rio’s UK-listed shares, said Rio could fund an acquisition of Glencore by issuing shares in Australia, which would rebalance Rio’s share structure and close the value gap between its Australian and London listings.

Activist investors, including Blackwattle, have urged Rio to move its primary listing to Sydney — where its stock trades at a premium — to simplify share-based deals.

Rio’s Australia-quoted shares fell 1.8 per cent in early trading in Sydney on Friday, before climbing back to be down 0.5 per cent.

Demand for commodities required to decarbonise the global economy — such as copper, lithium and aluminium — has triggered a flurry of dealmaking activity in the mining industry over the past year.

Rio last year announced a $7bn deal to acquire Arcadium Lithium to increases its presence in metals used in batteries for electric vehicles. People close to the company said it was still digesting that transaction. 

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Rio previously rejected a takeover bid by Glencore in 2014.

Lawcock said the reaction from some Rio investors in Australia was one of unease given Glencore’s reputation for smart dealmaking.

“Shareholders have said I don’t want any of my companies sitting across the table from Glencore,” he said.

Blackwattle’s David said the fact talks had ended showed Rio remained cautious in a consolidating market.

“I suspect Glencore wants a high premium,” he said. “It is a positive sign [that talks ceased] as it shows Rio is being disciplined and aware of not destroying shareholder value. It would be easy to panic.”

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ICE estimates it would need $26.9 billion to enforce GOP deportation bill

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ICE estimates it would need .9 billion to enforce GOP deportation bill

Detainees do a virtual visit with their attorneys or asylum officers at the Port Isabel Detention Center hosted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Harlingen Enforcement and Removal Operations center on June 10, 2024 in Los Fresnos, Texas.

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The Homeland Security Department is warning lawmakers in Congress that a proposed immigration enforcement bill would cost $26.9 billion to implement in its first year and “would be impossible for [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] to execute within existing resources.”

The Senate is currently weighing amendments on the Laken Riley Act, which would direct federal immigration enforcement to detain and deport anyone in the U.S. without legal status if they have been charged, arrested or convicted of burglary, theft, larceny or shoplifting.

The bill passed the House last week with more Democratic support than the previous time the body voted on it. The bill has been broadly seen as a marker emphasizing Washington’s focus on immigration and border security as President-elect Donald Trump is about to be inaugurated.

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Some Senate Democrats are giving the measure a chance. This week, a bipartisan set of procedural votes opened up the measure to further debate and changes.

But the agency in charge of carrying out the potential new law warns that it may physically not be able to.

New estimates from an internal ICE document obtained and verified by NPR show that the agency would need 110,000 more detention beds and over 10,000 enforcement and removal operations personnel to increase apprehensions, detentions and removals. More than 7,000 additional attorneys and support personnel would also be needed to handle immigration proceedings, according to the estimates.

The document notes that a figure of $3.2 billion “has been shared widely as a cost estimate,” but calls that number incorrect because it “does not represent the full cost of implementation.” The document says the previous estimate — outlined in a three-page memo from ICE sent in response to questions from one of the bill’s House sponsors — was based “on only 60,000 beds.”

Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., who introduced the measure in the Senate, did not respond to a request for comment. The measure that passed in the House does not include funding for additional ICE staff or resources. ICE declined to comment on its ability to enforce the bill.

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Senate Democrats and Republicans are working through several proposed amendments to the measure. There is not a timeline yet for a final floor vote.

The bill is named after a Georgia nursing student who was killed last year by a Venezuelan man who was in the U.S. without legal status. Her death became a rallying cry for Republicans, who criticized the Biden administration’s approach to border security. Her assailant, Jose Ibarra, was convicted in November and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Ibarra had previously been charged with shoplifting in New York, leading Republicans to argue that if the law had been in place, Riley may still be alive.

The bill’s critics have said it could lead to innocent people being thrown into detention without due process, and note that research shows that immigrants commit less crimes than those born in the U.S.

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